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  2. Ohara Koson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohara_Koson

    Ohara Koson (also Ohara Hōson, Ohara Shōson) (Kanazawa 1877 – Tokyo 1945) was a Japanese painter and woodblock print designer of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, at the forefront of shinsaku-hanga and shin-hanga art movements. [1] Ohara Koson was famous as a master of kachō-e (bird-and-flower) designs. Throughout a prolific career ...

  3. List of wildlife works of art by Frank Weston Benson

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wildlife_works_of...

    Scene: Canada geese (2) in flight. Great White Herons, etching: 1923: Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA: Benson, adept at capturing light in his paintings, demonstrates that skill in the creation of the etching Great White Herons. Benson "shows these graceful creatures in flight, the sunlight playing on their wide, white ...

  4. Great blue heron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_blue_heron

    The reddish egret (Egretta rufescens) and little blue heron (Egretta caerulea) could be mistaken for the great blue heron, but are much smaller, and lack white on the head and yellow in the bill. At the southernmost extent of its range (e.g., Colombia and Panama ), the great blue heron sometimes overlaps in range with the closely related and ...

  5. List of birds of Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_birds_of_Greece

    The family Ardeidae contains the bitterns, herons and egrets. Herons and egrets are medium to large wading birds with long necks and legs. Bitterns tend to be shorter necked and more wary. Members of Ardeidae fly with their necks retracted, unlike other long-necked birds such as storks, ibises and spoonbills. Great bittern, Botaurus stellaris

  6. Melchior d'Hondecoeter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melchior_d'Hondecoeter

    Hondecoeter's paintings featured geese (brent goose, Egyptian goose and red-breasted goose), fieldfares, partridges, pigeons, ducks, northern cardinal, magpies and peacocks, but also African grey crowned cranes, Asian sarus cranes, Indonesian yellow-crested cockatoos, an Indonesian purple-naped lory and grey-headed lovebirds from Madagascar.

  7. Cranes in Chinese mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cranes_in_Chinese_mythology

    Cranes regularly appear in Chinese arts such as paintings, tapestry, and decorative arts; they are also often depicted carrying the souls of the deceased to heaven. [2] The crane is the second most important bird after the fenghuang, the symbol of the empress, in China. [4]: 108